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Terence Davies

British filmmaker Terence Davies pays homage to the city of his birth in this visual essay on the seaside town of Liverpool. Described by Davies as "a love song and a eulogy," Of Time and the City use... read more read more...s vintage home movies and newsreel footage to paint a portrait of the Liverpool he knew as a child, a tough working-class community where decay and resilience walked side by side, even as many of the efforts to "improve" Liverpool in the '60s accomplished little beyond robbing it of its character and rough-hewn beauty. Combining a variety of found images with music and poetry, Of Time and the City explores how this slow evolution of Liverpool impacted the people who lived there, and how the people also became part of the city's ups and downs. Of Time and the City was screened as a special presentation at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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1,875 ratings

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54 critics

Unrated, 1 hr. 17 min.

Directed by: Terence Davies

Release Date: January 23, 2009

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DVD Release Date: May 12, 2009

Stats: 167 reviews

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Flixster Reviews (167)


  • October 4, 2010
    There are two main problems with contemporary documentary filmmaking. The first is that the films often become more about the personality of the people making them than the facts and arguments they are trying to present. Michael Moore may be the greatest culprit, but this trend c... read morean be traced back to Nick Broomfield?s Driving Me Crazy, in which all the dead-ends and failures of filmmaking were filmed in real time and included in the finished product.

    The second, resulting problem is that the vast majority of documentaries end up, in some form or another, preaching to the converted. Environmental films in particular start out with the best intentions and a solid amount of resources, but a number of factors intervene which prevent them from having ?mainstream appeal?. The subject matter may be too esoteric, the content may lecture the audience, or in the case of An Inconvenient Truth, you find yourself agreeing with everything being said whilst being bored senseless by the man who?s saying it.

    Of Time and the City should therefore be congratulated for avoiding both traps. Although it is unquestionably Davies? most personal film, it is not marked by anything which could resemble arrogance or vapid self-promotion. It is instead a film of contrasts and contradictions, examining the ambivalent relationship one has with one?s origins, whether physical or cultural. It is a poignant and emotional examination of ageing, memory and coming to terms with one?s past.

    Things don?t get off to a very convincing start. The opening five or ten minutes, which feature contemporary shots of Liverpool?s religious iconography, feel very televisual. Part of this might be down to our reaction to seeing archive footage on the big screen ? we are so used to seeing black-and-white newsreels in TV documentaries than it is easy to forget they were originally shown in cinemas. But even if certain elements of said footage are cinematic, they are still assembled and structured in a manner more befitting of television. Just as Danny, the Champion of the World suffered from the involvement of Thames Television, so the funding and expertise of BBC Films may explain the uneasy position Of Time and the City occupies on the big screen.

    The other immediate obstacle is Davies? narration. Anyone expecting a film about Liverpool to be narrated by someone with a whining, nasal Scouse accent is going to be surprised (perhaps pleasantly). Davies? voice is one of long, dolorous vowels and nervous consonants, and he expresses his opinions on a spectrum ranging from suppressed fury to jowly mourning via open-mouthed rapture. He resembles an old-school university lecturer, brought out of retirement to teach his favourite subject to a class of disinterested first-years. For anyone too young to remember Wallace Greenslade or John Snagge, it takes some getting used to.

    But after this uneasy first quarter of an hour, the film begins to build and you start to get swept up in the images that unfold. There is no central narrative or thesis beyond a loose chronology, which takes us spontaneously from the Second World War to the present day. In one beautiful moment, Davies recalls a childhood memory of catching a ferry on a day trip across the Mersey. He narrates: ?people got on board in black-and-white? they disembarked in colour?, and the footage mimics his narration.

    Even if it were little more than a collection of photographs set to music, one cannot deny that Davies is a skilful compiler. His choice of music and images mesh together beautifully, creating moments of great power in which one enhances the other. In one very poignant moment, he shows a collection of black-and-white images of abandoned factories, scoring them with Brahms? Lullaby. It?s a tender and elegiac combination, casting a grey cloud of sadness over an already dark time in the city?s history.

    Of Time and the City is on one level profoundly elegiac, with Davies mourning or remembering sadly all the images and traditions of his childhood years. There is something about black-and-white which brings out the earthy ruggedness in people, bringing all their crags and wrinkles to the fore. The section of Davies recalling Christmas in the 1950s is very evocative; it brings to mind the traditional seasonal images of Christmas past, without feeling in any way picture-postcard or chocolate box.

    But more deeply, Of Time and the City is about identity and memory, and how one shapes the other. The film is a cinematic scrapbook with Davies retracing his footsteps, trying patiently to hang on to his memories and to the city he once knew. Late in the film, he mournfully asks what has happened to his city, showing a montage of new housing developments and the changing shape of the riverside. But this is not some boring old fool moaning about the youth of today; this is a man remembering what he had, with mixed emotions, and trying to find glimpses of the good he knew in what he sees today.

    Davies? relationship with the past is far from straightforward, and the film is neither a breathless rant nor sentimental hagiography. There are great sections of him getting angry or expressing disillusionment with what was then the status quo. He lays into the monarchy during scenes of Elizabeth II?s coronation, calling it ridiculous to preserve such a thing out of tradition, and finding it obscene to stage such lavish ceremonies while millions were still on rations. In one laugh-out-loud moment he remarks: ?the problem with being poor is that it takes up all your time; the problem with being rich is that it takes up everybody else?s.?

    On more than one occasion, he expresses distrust of the church, recalling how he discovered ?it was all a lie? and calling himself a proud atheist. He even finds time to express contempt for The Beatles. But amidst his bouts of passionate fury, there are also plenty of moments with Davies embracing his past. He waxes lyrical about his love of film, expressing an almost religious passion for cinema as images of Gregory Peck and Ava Gardner grace the screen. He reads from T. S. Eliot?s The Four Quartets and P. B. Shelley?s Ozymandius like a priest might read from the Gospels: with reverence and a dry sense of humour.

    Of Time and the City is a deeply evocative film which examines memory, time and identity in the midst of a conflicted portrait of Liverpool. It takes a while to embrace its every idiosyncrasy, and its deeply personal tone may be alienating to some. But it crucially succeeds by not being entirely esoteric, providing a wide range of scenes and images which reach out to the viewer and invite you into this forgotten world. As a documentary it succeeds by conveying its message in an appealing and stimulating way, and by having an emotional core which feels honest and inviting.
  • May 5, 2010
    "Of Time and the City" is a ponderous video essay from Terence Davies wherein he explores his youth and the past of his home city of Liverpool. In remembering his childhood and the lost movie palaces, his lecturing tone makes him sound just like your crabby Marxist grandfather. ... read more And there is very little of interest done with the large amount of archival footage on hand, failing to put much of it in context. Even taking on such an easy target as the royal family, the result just sounds like sour grapes. Say what you will about the Windsors, but you cannot say anything bad about the Beatles who transcended their early pop roots and revolutionized music.
  • September 24, 2009
    I nearly turned off ten minutes into this, finding it slow and the narrator a little self-important, but it grew on me. If you're the kind of person who likes old news reels, and black-and-white footage , watch this. Only an hour long.
  • August 12, 2009
    Davies' essay film on his hometown is like a more bitter My Winnipeg. Using a lot of archive footage and ironic use of pop songs he illustrates his childhood's joys and pains such as his love of Hollywood and his burdened homosexuality repressed by his Catholic upbringing. His fe... read moreelings seem conflicted, on one hand he likes to wax nostaligic of the good old times, on the other hand he is angry toward the poor housing conditions and social problems of those times. Sometimes he comes off as rather snobby, such as when he says he got into classical music when the Beatles were popular, and it doesn't help that his tone throughout is rather pompous.
  • June 28, 2009
    Paste a bunch of old newsreels together, throw some haughty narration on top of it every minute or two, and call it an arty film. Pass.

Critic Reviews


Jonathan Rosenbaum
December 16, 2009
Jonathan Rosenbaum, Chicago Reader

Terence Davies, England's greatest living filmmaker, has released only six features, and this one is his first documentary, a mesmerizing and eloquent essay about his native Liverpool. Full Review

Roger Ebert
June 18, 2009
Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times

The film invites a reverie. It inspired thoughts of the transience of life. Full Review

Lisa Kennedy
March 27, 2009
Lisa Kennedy, Denver Post

Davies has carried out the duty of expansive memoirs. Instead of high-tailing it away from the rigors of reminiscence, he pushes headlong through them. Full Review

Peter Hartlaub
February 13, 2009
Peter Hartlaub, San Francisco Chronicle

A warm and extremely thoughtful journey, with a deliberately bare-bones narrative. Full Review

Kenneth Turan
January 30, 2009
Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times

Of Time and the City is a difficult film to describe but a distinct pleasure to experience. Full Review

Geoff Pevere
January 23, 2009
Geoff Pevere, Toronto Star

[A] mesmerizing, visceral and heartfelt, a lushly rendered assembly of colour and black-and-white archival footage that evokes not only a remembrance of things past, but perhaps as they never were. Full Review

Lisa Schwarzbaum
January 22, 2009
Lisa Schwarzbaum, Entertainment Weekly

A short, beautiful, characteristically sublime memory piece by the great British auteur Terence Davies. Full Review

A.O. Scott
January 21, 2009
A.O. Scott, New York Times

The documentary Of Time and the City looks at the pains and pleasures of growing up Roman Catholic and gay in postwar Britain. Full Review

J. Hoberman
January 21, 2009
J. Hoberman, Village Voice

No nostalgic 'Penny Lane' or 'Strawberry Fields' here. The filmmaker prefers an angrier form of sentimentality. Full Review

Leslie Felperin
October 18, 2008
Leslie Felperin, Variety

Result is by turns moving, droll and charming, and niftily assembled, but not necessarily that profound. Full Review

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Of Time and the City Trivia


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